Vincent van Gogh • Paris • Montmartre • Modern colour
Van Gogh in Paris: the color explodes
Two years in the capital, and its palette goes from serious earthy to fireworks with a nervous brush.
Paris, 1886. Van Gogh arrives with a still dark palette, a lot of determination, and probably the air of a man who has already had three deep conversations with a pair of shoes. Two years later, he starts again transformed: more frank colors, freer touch, electric self-portraits and Montmartre in the sights.
The Paris period of Vincent van Gogh is the great laboratory before Arles. He discovers there Impressionism, on Pointillism, on Japonism, the cafés d'artistes and this wonderful Parisian fatigue that makes you want to paint the world in stronger colors.
Artistic reading
Why does Paris change everything in Van Gogh's life?
Paris is not just a stopover. It is the moment when Van Gogh falls into a vanguard pot: Impressionists, neo-impressionists, Japanese prints, cafes, galleries, merchants, artists who debate too much, and Montmartre who constantly poses as if he already knew that he would become mythical.
In two years, Van Gogh looks, copies, experiments, sometimes misses, often succeeds, then accelerates. He does not become a docile student of Paris: he serves as a huge artistic charger. Once connected, the painting will never really slow down again.
The palette is brightening
The earthy tones leave room for yellow, blue, green and red. Browns officially file notice.
The key is loosening
Van Gogh observes the avant-gardes, then transforms everything in his own way, without asking the good taste committee for permission.
Montmartre becomes a workshop
Moulins, roofs, streets and hills become experimental terrain. Paris pose, Vincent accelerates.
Historical background
Paris, the real tipping point
In February 1886, Vincent van Gogh He left the dark landscapes of the North and discovered a capital in the midst of a bustling process: exhibitions, workshops, cafes, merchants, modern artists and long-term aesthetic discussions to cool a soup.
Theo, a art dealer, opens the doors to a new world. Van Gogh discovers the works of Claude Monet, Camille Pissarro, Georges Seurat and Paul Signac. He observes the light colors, the separate keys, the sharper contrasts. In short, he understands that the paint can remove his brown coat.
In just two years, he absorbs modern influences and reconstructs his pictorial language.Impressionism, on Pointillism, on Japonism, then begins to paint with a clearer, more vivid, more personal intensity. Paris does not make him wise: Paris gives him matches.
Before Paris
Before the light: a Van Gogh still very serious
Before Paris, Van Gogh painted rural, dark, close to the realism. Its palette is made of brown, d'ocres, deep grey. It is sincere, human, powerful... but on the chromatic explosion side, we are more peasant soup at the corner of the fire than fire fireworks on Montmartre.
His first works already show real human intensity. Van Gogh is interested in workers, modest objects, harsh landscapes. He seeks the truth before beauty. It is admirable, but let us admit it: at this point, color has not yet received his VIP invitation.
À Paris, tout change. Il comprend que la couleur peut devenir un langage à part entière. Elle ne sert plus seulement à représenter : elle sert à ressentir. Ce n’est plus “voici un paysage”, mais “voici ce que ce paysage me fait à l’intérieur, accrochez vos ceintures”.
Pair of shoes
A simple subject, almost silent, but already loaded with matter and intensity. Even the shoes seem to have lived three novels.
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At the edge of Paris
A peripheral Paris, less postcard, but perfect for understanding its stylistic transition.
See this reproductionColour Revolution
Paris lui montre la lumière, Van Gogh répond : “je prends le lot complet”
In Paris, Van Gogh discovers modern painters: Monet, Pissarro, Seurat, SignacHe observes their research on light, touch, division of tones and pure color.
But Van Gogh does not just become an impressionist. He absorbs everything, then transforms. His painting becomes more nervous, bright, and personality. It's a bit like Paris saying to him: "You can dare," and Van Gogh replied: "Very well, hang up the paintings on the wall, it'll shake."
This period is crucial because it prepares Arles directly. The franker yellows, the more vibrant blues, the bolder greens and the more expressive reds do not magically arise in the South: they start to warm up here, between Parisian roofs, Montmartre mills and bouquets that suddenly take a lot of confidence.
The Fête du 14 July in Paris
A luminous, urban, festive work: Paris begins to put color in its painting, without asking permission.
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Bol with sunflowers, roses and other flowers
Flowers become a color laboratory. Even the vase seems to be participating in the experiment.
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Square Saint-Pierre, Paris
A clear, lively Parisian scene, perfect for feeling the evolution of Van Gogh's gaze.
See this reproductionImbolic works
Paris paintings to know absolutely
The Paris period is sometimes less popular than the Tournesols or The Starry NightIt is here that Van Gogh finds his acceleration. His self-portraits, his views of Montmartre and his still lifes tell an artist in full motion.
In Paris, he paints a lot of self-portraits, especially because models are expensive. Van Gogh solution: painting oneself. Practical, economical, and very intense. The mirror becomes a psychological workshop, and the artist's gaze seems to already announce the great paintings to come.
Self-portrait with felt hat
A frontal look, a vibrant touch, an intensity that already announces the mature Van Gogh.
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The Moulin de la Galette
Montmartre becomes a modern subject: mill, sky, street, movement, everything begins to vibrate.
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Montmartre windmills
A perfect Parisian design: old village, emerging modernity and brush that takes confidence.
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Montmartre Hill
A rare, almost crude view where Van Gogh observes Paris before it becomes totally urban.
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View of the rooftops of Paris
Since then, Paris has become an intimate, soft and very decorative motif.
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Self-portrait with the pipe and straw hat
Van Gogh paints himself to understand himself, and obviously he doesn't choose half intensity.
See this reproductionInternal mesh
Collections to explore around Van Gogh in Paris
To extend the reading, here are the most coherent collections around this period: Paris, self-portraits, landscapes, still lifes, post-impressionism and modern influences. It is the perfect route to understand how a painter arrives in Paris with a serious palette and set out ready to make the yellows of Provence tremble.
Van Gogh in Paris
The central collection to discover Van Gogh's Parisian transformation.
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Vincent van Gogh
The great collection to browse the evolution of the artist, from the dark earth to the boiling stars.
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Van Gogh's self-portraits
Intense looks, strong colours and an artistic identity in the middle of construction.
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Landscape Van Gogh
From views of Montmartre to the landscapes of the South, Van Gogh transforms everything into emotion.
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Still life Van Gogh
Fruits, flowers, simple objects: everything becomes a field of color and matter.
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Post-Impressionism
The movement that allows Van Gogh to overcome impressionism to impose his inner vision.
Explore the CollectionDecorative inspiration
What work by Van Gogh in Paris choose for your home?
Van Gogh's Parisian works have a particular charm: they are less expected than the great classics of Provence, but they tell of an essential transformation. It is a choice of connoisseur, a bit like ordering the discreet dish at the restaurant and discovering that it is the best of the map.
For a bright and urban decoration, the views of Paris and Montmartre work very well. For a more intense atmosphere, the self-portraits bring a real presence. Be careful however: a self-portrait of Van Gogh in an office does not only look at the room, it also seems to check if you really are moving on your files.
| Work | Atmosphere | Recommended piece |
|---|---|---|
| The Fête du 14 July in Paris | Coloured, urban, festive | Salon, entrance, creative office |
| Self-portrait with felt hat | Intense, expressive, iconic | Office, library, wall gallery |
| View of the rooftops of Paris | Sweet, Parisian, contemplative | Room, clear living room, hallway |
| The Moulin de la Galette | Montmartre, historical, living | Living room, dining room, workshop |
Useful links
Official sources and pathways for continuing
To deepen Van Gogh in Paris, here are internal links to relevant collections and official external links to museums. What to continue the visit without ending lost in Montmartre, even if, let's be honest, it would be a pretty elegant way to get lost.
Internal links
FAQ
Frequently asked questions about Van Gogh in Paris
When does Van Gogh arrive in Paris?
Vincent van Gogh arrived in Paris in February 1886. He joined his brother Théo and stayed in the capital for about two years, before leaving for Arles in February 1888.
Why is Paris so important in its journey?
Paris allows him to discover impressionism, pointillism, japonism and a new way of using color. This period directly prepares his later masterpieces. In plain terms: Paris presses the chromatic switch.
What works does Van Gogh paint in Paris?
He painted many self-portraits, views of Montmartre, mills, rooftops of Paris, urban scenes, still lifes and floral studies.
Which artists influence Van Gogh in Paris?
Van Gogh discovered Monet, Pissarro, Seurat, Signac, and the Japanese prints. He absorbed these influences without copying them servility: he transformed them into personal language.
Which work to choose for a Parisian decoration?
The views of Montmartre and the rooftops of Paris are perfect for an urban and elegant atmosphere. For a more intense effect, a self-portrait works very well in a desk or library.
Can we buy a hand painted reproduction of this period?
Yes. Various works of Van Gogh related to his Parisian period exist in oil-on-paint reproduction, including his views of Montmartre, his self-portraits and his still lifes.
Conclusion
Paris is not a parenthesis: it is the moment when Van Gogh becomes Van Gogh
In Paris, Van Gogh learns to look differently. He discovers the modern colour, the avant-garde artists, the roofs, the mills, the streets of Montmartre and the pictorial freedom that will make possible the whole after. Arles, Saint-Rémy, Auvers: everything begins here, in this noisy, brilliant and frankly decisive capital. Paris does not only give him a decor: Paris gives him the momentum. Van Gogh, as often, presses a little hard on the accelerator.
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